Aussie Grill On S.R. 56 Closes; Is Portillo’s Coming To Replace Rock & Brews? 

Considering that long-established eateries like Red Lobster and TGI Fridays have shuttered many of their stores, it wasn’t a big shock that Bloomin’ Brands — which also is the parent company of Outback, Carrabba’s and Bonefish — made the decision to shutter most of its U.S. locations of Aussie Grill

Among the stores that already are permanently closed is the Lutz/Wesley Chapel location on the north side of S.R. 56, across from the Tampa Premium Outlets, which closed its doors earlier this month. We had no news at our press time as to what might replace Aussie Grill, but we’ll keep you posted. 

Meanwhile, Portillo’s — the Chicago-based hot dog and Italian beef chain — originally announced on Dec. 5 that it was opening “later this year” and even gave the address of the new Portillo’s as 26000 S.R. 56 and said that it would be a 6,250-sq.-ft. restaurant. That announcement was later changed to what is shown below, but the spark had been lit, as many midwesterners rejoiced, many locals who had tried but weren’t overjoyed shrugged their shoulders and everyone else tried to figure out how Portillo’s could open a huge sit-down restaurant in just a few weeks time, in a location that already has a huge (actually closer to 8,000 sq. ft.) sit-down restaurant — as that address is where the Rock & Brews on the south side of S.R. 56, in front of the outlet mall, currently sits and is still open (and is still advertising in our pages). 

As soon as I saw the original announcement, I headed to the nearest Portillo’s location — on E. Fowler Ave. in Tampa — to ask what the management of that location knew about the new store, but I was referred to corporate, which has not yet responded to my very detailed email, even though the revised press release at Portillos.com shown left deleted the planned address and timeframe in the original (Note-26000 S.R. 56 is still listed as the Lutz address when you click on the “Locations” button on the site). 

Of course, I also took the time to sample my first Portillo’s Italian beef sandwich, with added mozzarella cheese and extra Italian gravy/au jus on the side, and I’ll admit it was pretty tasty. Good crinkle cut fries, too. 

Our contact at Rock & Brews didn’t get back to us with an answer as to whether or not that location was closing, but we’ll keep you posted. — GN 

2 & 2 Restaurant — The ‘2 Minute’ Zephyrhills Tradition Expands To Wesley Chapel! 

(Below left) Owner Kruth (Kurt) Sombutmai thanks everyone for attending the Grand Opening & ribbon-cutting ceremony (above) for the 2&2 Restaurant he owns with his wife, Suzie (also holding scissors) on S.R. 54 in Wesley Chapel. (Photos by Charmaine George) 

Unlike most of his already-large contingent of regular customers — many of whom attended the Grand Opening and Zephyrhills Chamber of Commerce ribbon-cutting event on Dec. 12 — I first met owner Kruth (Kurt) Sombutmai and his beloved wife of 48 years, Sa-Ang (Suzie) a few weeks ago, as they were getting ready to open their 2&2 Restaurant on S.R. 54 in Wesley Chapel, less than a mile west of Morris Bridge Rd./Eiland Blvd. 

Even so, it’s hard not to love this couple, who have been serving down-home food to the Zephyrhills community for 35 years and are now hoping to attract a lot of new customers in Wesley Chapel. 

The ribbon-cutting event wasn’t your usual show-up-stay-for-a-bit-&-go-home affair. Most of the people in attendance, many of whom were, like Kurt, military veterans, stayed for at least a couple of hours to be regaled by stories of how Kurt moved from California, purchased the Hills Grocery on the Zephyrhills side of the corner of Morris Bridge Rd. and S.R. 54 and became one of that community’s best-known restaurateurs. Sure, they also hung around for the delicious free food buffet that followed the ceremony, but there wasn’t a single long-time customer of Kurt and Suzie’s who didn’t have a story they wanted to share about them. The event was indeed a beautiful tribute. 

In addition to the Chamber folks, Zephyrhills Mayor Charlie Procter and former Pasco Clerk of the Court & Comptroller Paula O’Neil were in attendance for the ceremony and Paula said that Kurt and Suzie are among her best friends. 

“Paula first announced she was running for the Clerk’s office at my restaurant,” Kurt recalled. “She visited me in the hospital when I got sick a few years ago, too.” 

Kurt, Paula O’Neil & Suzie at the Grand Opening. 

If you’re like me, you’re probably wondering where the name “2 & 2” came from. It’s basically a tribute to Kurt’s original restaurant, which often had lines wrapped around it for Kurt’s $1.99 “Eye Opener” breakfast and “all you can eat” fried fish special on Fridays. Whenever anyone asked Kurt how long the wait would be, he’d always hold up two fingers and say, “Two minutes!” The saying became so popular that when Kurt sold his Hills Grocery coffee shop to CVS and opened his location on U.S. Hwy. 301 in Zephyrhills, he called the new restaurant “2 Minutes,” and he decided to call the new place “2 & 2,” meaning that he now has two restaurants with two-minute waits. 

The 2 Minutes restaurant, as well as Kurt and Suzie’s Best Thai & Sushi on S.R. 54 in Zephyrhills, are both still open, too. 

Whether you visit 2 & 2 Restaurant for breakfast, lunch or dinner, not only are you likely to be greeted by Kurt, you’re also guaranteed to see Kurt’s tribute to his idol, the late, great “Duke” himself, John Wayne. You’ll also find homestyle cooking and always fair prices. 

The Grand Opening included a delicious buffet of free food, although our editor prefers 2&2’s bacon, ham & cheese omelet with crispy hash browns (below right) & garlic pork chops (below left). 

In the few short weeks since 2 & 2 opened, I’ve been able to sample quite a bit of the menu, especially for breakfast because, unlike some other diners, where the full menu is served all day, you can only get breakfast at breakfast time and lunch and dinner from 11:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m. 

My favorite breakfast item so far is the cheese omelet, which I got with large chunks of grilled ham and thick slices of crispy bacon inside. And, if you order the hash browns (there’s also home fries and grits and sausage links or patties available as sides) extra crispy, like I do, they really do come out super-crispy. So good. 

I also sampled Charmaine’s pancakes when she ordered the Kurtski Breakfast, which you basically could call the “Kitchen Sink,” because it comes with 2 eggs, 2 pancakes or two French toast slices, 3 pieces of bacon and 3 sausage, hash browns or home fries or grits, plus toast AND refillable coffee, all for just $12.99! The pancakes were light and fluffy and even though they’re not on the menu with blueberries, the kitchen added fresh blueberries at Charmaine’s request and all I can say is that it should become part of the menu! 

There also are veggie and western skillets (the western has ham, green peppers & onions with cheese, hash browns or home fries and egg on top). 

For lunch and dinner, appetizers include everything from bacon-wrapped shrimp smothered in honey BBQ sauce and battered gator bites to soft pretzel bites and Philly egg rolls served with beer cheese. Sandwich options include battered or grilled “2 Mins Fish,” a double decker turkey, ham and roast beef club and “Suzie Spicy” chicken sandwich with melted cheddar, tortilla strips, avocado and sriracha mayo. There’s also a fresh salad bar. 

I can vouch for the 1/4-lb. Kurtski burger and you can sub a short rib, brisket and chuck patty for only $1 more. Tasty fries, too. My favorite lunch/ dinner entrĂ©e so far is the grilled garlic pork chops, served with mashed potatoes (you also can choose baked potato or fries), plus your choice of soup or salad, ice cream and a soft drink, all for just $14.99. I plan to try the slow-cooked pot roast, breaded veal cutlet and fried chicken dinners on future visits. There’s also seafood dinners (catfish or haddock, coconut shrimp, fried clams or grilled salmon) for just $15.99. And yes, the All You Can Eat fish fry is available on Fridays only, for just $13.99! 

For info about 2 & 2 Restaurant (33835 S.R. 54), call (813) 355-4829, visit 2and2Restaurant.com or see the ad below. — GN

Recapping Thanksgiving & Previewing NYE At The Hyatt Place Wesley Chapel 

Do you already have plans for New Year’s Eve? If not, may I suggest visiting spending the turn of the year at the Hyatt Place Tampa-Wesley Chapel? 

Hear me out on this one: The Hyatt Place hosted three sittings for Thanksgiving Day and Jannah and I were among those who helped sell out the place, each of which offered a beautiful, sumptuous buffet dinner, including a fried turkey and slow-roasted prime rib carving station (photo), plus ham and citrus-glazed salmon, side dishes like sautĂ©ed green beans, garlic mashed potatoes and sweet & savory glazed carrots, plus desserts like traditional apple pie and sweet potato pie. There also was live music, unlimited mimosas and a full premium liquor bar. 

Jannah and I so thoroughly enjoyed (and, OK, overstuffed) ourselves, we decided to sign up for the Hyatt Place’s New Year’s Eve celebration — on Tuesday, December 31 (obviously), 8 p.m.-1 a.m. 

Here’s what we (and possibly, you) have to look forward to: More chef-prepared food stations, a live DJ, dancing, 4-hour open bar, a champagne toast at midnight and more. We signed up for the “premium” experience and at our press time, there were still both reservations for the New Year’s Eve event and room reservations available for that night. 

Please call (813) 803-5600 to book your reservation. We’ll see you there! — GN 

Good 5 Golf — A Locally-Owned Golf & Lifestyle Brand For The Average Golfer 

Tampa Palms resident Scott Strunk (left) & his friend & partner Jorge Arroyo started Good 5 Golf to sell quality golf apparel to the average golfer. (All photos provided by Scott Strunk) 

When I was a much younger man, I used to play some golf, but considering that my goal was to someday play bogey golf (one shot above par on every hole, or a score of 90 on a par-72 course), I clearly wasn’t very good. As my sons reached the age where they chose to play pretty much every team sport, even when I wasn’t one of the coaches, it still fell on me to drive them to and from every practice and most every game. Golf was the one thing in my life at the time that I felt comfortable giving up, because of how long it takes to play an entire round, much less practice or take enough lessons to improve. 

When Tampa Palms resident Scott Strunk started advertising his company Good 5 Golf with us, it wasn’t 100% clear to me whether he was selling golf apparel or lessons or both or what the significance of “Good 5” was — at least until I read his explanation on Good5Golf.com. 

For those of you who love to play the world’s most humbling game, you may already be that bogey golfer I aspired to be, which likely means you’re hoping to play scratch golf someday. 

If so, I’m sure you’ve experienced that feeling when you could’ve easily hit a double bogey, but you either hit a nice shot from out of the woods or sunk a long putt that allowed you to still hit a 5 on a hard par four and someone said to you, “Good 5.” (Or, for me, “Great 5.”) 

Good 5 has matching T-shirts for every cap color.

Well, Scott says that was the motivation for calling the LLC he founded with his childhood friend from rural New Jersey, Jorge Arroyo, in September of this year. 

“I had just gotten a bogey on a par 4 and my friend said to me, ‘Hey, Good 5,’ and that was it for me,” Scott says. “I said, ‘I’m going to start a golf brand called Good 5.’” 

The company’s motto on his ad, is “Good 5 is for the golfer who accepts bogey with grace, style and comfort. It’s better than a double. It’s a Good 5.” 

Nearly three short months later, Good 5 is the locally owned company that sells top-quality golf caps in a variety of styles — from the super-popular “rope caps,” with the rope crossing the top of the brim, to trucker-style and peached cotton twill caps, all embroidered here in Tampa with the unique Good 5 logo. The company also sells heavyweight golf T-shirts in all of the same colors as the hats, so you can mix and match them all. 

“We will be adding golf polo shirts, in both men’s and women’s styles, in the future,” Scott says, “but right now, we’re just focusing on hats and T-shirts.” 

He adds that what he doesn’t want is to put his logo on “some cheap polo shirts that fall apart after two washings. This brand is about quality, and we’re still looking for the right polo shirts at the right price.” He also says he also plans to put the logo on ball markers and maybe even golf tees and golf balls in the future, “if things go well.” 

Scott notes, however, that Good 5 probably won’t be getting into adding golf shorts or pants anytime soon, “because there are just too many sizes, fits and styles to deal with.” 

He also says that sales are going pretty well, but he started advertising Good 5 in these pages because, “I purchased quite a bit of inventory (from Oregon-based Richardson Sports), “most of which is taking up most of the space in my office. In order to get hats of this quality at a reasonable price, you have to buy quite a few at a time. Let’s just say that my credit cards are all pretty much maxed out.” 

Fortunately for Scott, whose background is in computer sales and who still has his “day job” with a company that sells high-end gaming computers, “Unlike computers, shirts and caps kept in plastic won’t go bad in six months or a year or become what I call ‘aged bananas.’ It’s better to have too many than to run out of stock. We have a lot of friends who’ve bought them and everyone so far loves them.” 

Scott’s daughter Ashley, who handles the company’s social media, sports a Good 5 rope cap. 

Scott says that when he first told Jorge, who still lives in New Jersey, that he was planning to start a golf apparel company, Jorge said, “You do realize that’s a really competitive business, right?” 

Scott countered, “I know, but I’m at the age now where I don’t just want to think about doing things in the future, I want to actually do them. I really want to do this and I really want it to do well. But, if it ends up not making money, I guess that’s OK, too.” 

So, Jorge, who had sold a company and was always interested in a good idea, agreed to partner with his long-time friend. They purchased the domain name “Good5Golf.com” and Scott says they realized, “We need a really cool-looking logo — which I think we have. — and the right brand with the right marketing. I worked with a local company that I know from Tampa Palms Golf & Country Club to (he has lived in Tampa Palms since 2019) help me source some of the hats and T-shirts and I created the website. So, we’re going full steam ahead with this Good 5 Golf brand.” 

Scott then enlisted his 25-year-old daughter Ashley — who was on the golf team at her high school in Boca Raton and then at Eckerd College — to handle social media for the business and Good 5 Golf was born. 

He notes that, “The reason the logo only says ‘Good 5’ and not ‘Good 5 Golf’ is because I really want this to become a ‘lifestyle brand,’ not just a golf brand. Good 5 can be about anything.” 

Scott says that his father enlisted in the Navy and served as an intelligence officer in the Vietnam War. “I was born in Key West because my dad was stationed there,” he says. 

In addition, George Miragliuolo, another one of Scott & Jorge’s friends from their K-12 school (which had only 23 kids in their graduating class), did multiple tours of combat duty in the military, so he hopes to someday have an opportunity to partner up with a charity that provides service to military veterans. 

“We’re trying to figure out how we can honor veterans in general,” Scott says, “and we want to tie in with one of the great veterans’ charities going on out there. But we haven’t figured out how to do that yet.” 

For more info about Good 5 Golf, visit Good5Golf.com. You also can follow the brand on Facebook and Instagram @Good5Golf. And, if you use the code “NewTampa” from the ad below, you’ll save 25% off your purchase. So remember, “It’s better than a double. It’s a Good 5.” 

The Townes At Cross Creek Townhomes Are Filling Up Quickly! 

The Townes at Cross Creek townhomes by Lennar Homes (on Cross Creek Blvd., across from the main entrance to Heritage Isles) offer a more affordable alternative then most single-family homes in the New Tampa area. (Photo by Joel Provenzano) 

A little over a year ago, in our Sept. 23 New Tampa issue, we told you about an upcoming townhome community that Lennar was getting ready to build, called the Townes at Cross Creek. 

The unique thing about this development is the fact that it is new residential construction, in the heart of what was otherwise an entirely built out and established Cross Creek Blvd. corridor, something that hadn’t been seen in years. 

For the past couple of years, townhomes have been extremely popular with buyers — especially with rising real estate prices —as a mostly less-expensive option to traditional single family-homes, while still offering the living space, garages and floorplan options buyers desire, just with less land. 

And, that’s been great for Lennar, as the construction giant has been actively building a large portion of the new townhome market around the Tampa Bay area, typically at the lowest price point compared with their competitors, with DR Horton being Lennar’s closest rival. 

According to sales rep Carlos Torres and construction manager Fernando Ospina, the Townes have been going absolutely gangbusters since they began being built in June of this year. And, that’s without even having an onsite sales office open yet! 

The Townes at Cross Creek are divided into two phases. Although there is no “Phase A” or “Phase C” (and we have no idea why), “Phase B” consists of 60 units (located directly across the street from the entrance to the Heritage Isles community); and “Phase D,” consists of 35 units further to the east, being built almost simultaneously together, but oddly about a half mile from each other on two completely separate parcels of land. 

As of Nov 25, 27 of the 60 units in Phase B were already, according to Lennar’s website, and the Lennar team told us a few more were working towards closing, including the “model,” where the garage space was actively being built into the on-site sales office for the development (but it was not yet open as of our press time). 

We were told that the buyer for the model was itching to close because, when the model sells while still being used as a model, the builder will do a lease-back to the buyer, effectively paying the buyer rent until Lennar is done using it and will then convert the sales office back into a two-car garage. 

When Ospina, was asked why the on-site sales office wasn’t finished yet, he explained that, “It took longer than expected to get the needed permit, but it was received Nov. 16,” where they promptly started the build-out, and are now close to adding furniture. He chuckled and said the delay was due to, “The City of Tampa, you know, being the City of Tampa,” eluding to the always- arduous permitting process. 

Other than that, he said construction had been going really well, with the number of days for each townhome building completion (under his purview) being only about 129 days, a full month faster than the average for his company. 

“Even though we’ve been doing great, we could ideally use another construction manager to help keep pace,” Ospina said as he flipped through the multi-page checklist he had in his hands, detailing inspection item after inspection item, everything that needed to be perfect before a unit could be finished. 

The day we showed up to look at the community, three other groups of people also pulled up (one of whom had an appointment), but Torres was able to effectively split up his time, making sure everyone’s questions were answered. 

Torres said that they’ve been so busy that they wondered if they would really even need to open the on-site sales office at all. He’s been driving out and meeting people with appointments on-site, and currently any customers who want to sit down and discuss numbers or go over paperwork have met him at Lennar’s Two Rivers office in Zephyrhills, about 10 minutes away, at: 35027 Brackett Bend Rd. 

Ospina said that most of the buildings will be done over the next five months, with occupancy for Phase D being ready in March, April, and May. The very last building on the project schedule is actually a 6-unit building across from the future on-site sales office in Phase B, to be ready for occupancy before the fall of next year. 

As construction progresses, units are only being released for sale in very small handfuls. Lennar’s online transparency makes seeing the inventory quick and straightforward. The website for the community actually shows which units have sold, which are currently for sale (with exact current prices) and which ones are upcoming on an interactive map, along with the floorplans. 

All three floorplans feature 3 bedrooms and 2.5 bathrooms with usable covered patios that can easily be screened. All units also have large kitchen islands (above), as well as a second-story loft, which even the in the small plan was still a usable size and layout. Here are the three units at the Townes: 

Allegiance – 1,597 sq. ft., with a 1-car garage; being offered at $319,990 

Constitution – 1,760 sq. ft., 1-car garage; being offered at $339,900 

Declaration- 1,807 sq. ft., 2 car garage; being offered at $364,900 (this is the model and the end units on each building) 

These were the advertised online prices at the time of writing the article and are subject to change), but Torres said that additional discounts may be offered at various times, and the prices for the Declaration plan may go all the way up to around $410,000, depending upon the lot. 

The prices seem very competitive to whats being offered in other Lennar communities, especially considering these are being built in the desirable and geographically well-positioned New Tampa. Prices are even similar to what was being sold by Lennar up in Connerton, a community on the north end of Land O’ Lakes, but these New Tampa units do come with some drawbacks. 

The $384 monthly homeowner association (HOA) fee is definitely on the high side, especially considering that this community has no amenities. Torres also says that no utilities are included in the HOA fee, but that it does cover outside maintenance and insurance. The units at the Townes also have tiny backyards — noticeably smaller than other recent townhome communities we’ve toured. 

Torres asked that anyone interested in seeing the community should make an appointment, and check to see if the on-site sales office has been opened yet. The phone number is (888) 211-6153. Carlo Torres also can be reached by email at carlo.torres@lennar.com.